Tag Archives: CT Mirror

Roundup: Candlelight Concert, Leslye Headland, Board of Ed …

For the 84th year in a row, the Staples High School Music Department presented its gift to the town: the Candlelight Concert.

Performances continue today, at 3 and 8 p.m. All tickets were already claimed, weeks ago.

Tomorrow’s “06880” will offer a full photographic portrait of the very special event. Here is one scene, from early last night:

(Photo/Lynn Untermeyer Miller)

 

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New York Times chief theater critic Jesse Green gave a rave review to “Cult of Love,” the new show that opened Thursday at the Helen Hayes Theater.

He likes the “rip-roaring home-for-the-holidays dramedy” for its plot, direction, music and more.

He also praises playwright Leslye Headland. This is the 1999 Staples High School graduate’s Broadway debut. But she’s earned kudos before, as a playwright, screenwriter and director (“Bachelorette,” “Sleeping With Other People,” “Russian Doll,” “The Acolyte”).

“Cult of Love” is Headland’s final work in a series called “Seven Deadly Plays.” Inspired by the 7 deadly sins, this one is about pride. It was first staged in Los Angeles in 2018.

The play focuses on 4 adult children of one family and their partners, coming home for a contentious holiday gathering.

Green writes: “Though ‘Cult of Love,’ like many unhappy family reunion plays, draws big buckets of humor from the toxic brew of religion and repression, those buckets also draw blood.

“Headland knows just how to get there, suggesting deep familiarity with the territory. But she also has a gift for complication and construction, as was already evident in “Bachelorette,” her Bridezillas Gone Wild breakthrough play of 2010…. Loading pattern on pattern — a holiday-season design don’t for most — is for her an opportunity to dizzy us down to hell.”

Click here for the full Times review. Click here for more information about “Cult of Love.” (Hat tip: Tommy Greenwald)

Leslye Headland

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This is a very busy time of year.

But if you still need something to do, check out this calendar (courtesy of Westport’s Department of Human Services):

Today (Saturday, December 14, 1 to 3:30 p.m.): Gingerbread Cookie Decorating,  Westport Museum for History & Culture ($15 per pair)

Today and tomorrow (December 14-15, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.): Westport Police and PAL toy drive at ASF, Awesome Toys and The Toy Post

December 17 (3 to 5 p.m.): Ornament Making, Westport Museum for History & Culture ($5 entry includes hot cocoa and all materials for group of 2)

December 18, 19, 20, 21 (7 p.m.): “Together at the Table”: Family dinner and “A Sherlock Carol,” Westport Country Playhouse

December 19 (4:30 p.m.): Lighthouse and Holiday Movie Night, Toquet Hall

December 19 (1:15 p.m.): Play With Your Food table reading, Westport Senior Center

December 19 (2:30 p.m.): The Jazz Rabbi, with guitarist Paul Bollenback, Westport Senior Center

December 20 (7 p.m.): “The Nightmare Before Christmas” drop-by movie night, Toquet Hall

December 20, 21, 22: 1940s Christmas by Candlelight Tours of the Coley House; $25 advanced tickets required; click here

December 27 (5 to 11 p.m.): Alumni Night, Toquet Hall (free)

Toquet Hall is one of many places with activities this month.

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The Board of Education’s Policy Committee meets Wednesday (December 18, 9 a.m., Town Hall Room 307), with a wide-ranging agenda.

They’ll discuss the first reading of possible revisions to graduation requirements; admission to the Westport Public Schools at or before age 5 and assignment to grade levels; and student attendance, truancy and chronic absenteeism.

The committee will also discuss health concerns “such as lice,” and a possible new civility policy.

meanwhile, the Long Lots School Building Committee meeting scheduled for Tuesday has been postponed to Wednesday (December 18, 6 p.m., Town Hall Room 307/309. The agenda has not yet been posted.


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Speaking of schools: All month long, Kings Highway Elementary School students have collected gifts for their annual Holiday Bear drive.

Each year, the Connecticut Education Foundation’s Holiday Bear provides gifts for children whose families face financial or other hardships.

The KHS Caring Council helped package 25 Holiday Bear bags.

Meanwhile, yesterday the school helped raise funds for Connecticut Children’s Hospital.

Students also wore pajamas as part of a statewide spirit day.

It’s been an eventful month for Kings Highway!

A few of Kings Highway’s many holiday bags.

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John McKinney is the newest member of the Connecticut Mirror’s board of directors.

The Mirror is state’s non-profit, non-partisan, digital source for public policy, government and politcal news.

McKinney — a descendant of Westport’s famed Bedford family — is also a trustee of the Westport Weston Family YMCA.

The former State Senate minority leader and a Republican candidate for governor, he was appointed by Governor Ned Lamont to the Liquor Control Commission in 2021.

McKinney serves on the advisory board of Operation Hope, a homeless shelter in Fairfield. He and his family help provide housing and care for people with AIDS through the Stewart B. McKinney Foundation. It is named for his father, the longtime US Congressman from Westport’s district.

John McKinney

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The quiet geometry of a Compo Beach low tide highlights today’s “Westport … Naturally” image.

(Photo/Celia Campbell-Mohn)

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And finally … on this date in 1819,  Alabama became the 22nd US state.

(Whether you’re here in Westport, way down in Alabama, or anywhere else, “06880” is your hyper-local source for news, events and much more. Please click here to support our work. Thank you!)

Roundup: Aid In Dying, Learn A Trade, Carl Swanson’s Books …

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Lynda Shannon Bluestein is a longtime member — and former board chair — of the Unitarian Church in Westport.

She just published a very moving piece in The CT Mirror, on medical aid in dying.

The 2-time cancer survivor writes: “I simply want the right to have a say in the timing and manner of my death when I reach the point where my disease or the pain and suffering it causes robs me of the quality of life that is essential to me.”

Click here for the full, enlightening story. (Hat tip: Steve Axthelm)

Lynda Shannon Bluestein (Photo courtesy of The CT Mirror)

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As Build Back Better infrastructure funds begin flowing, skilled workers in a variety of trades will be needed. The Connecticut Department of Transportation alone is looking for 100 people, especially those with commercial drivers licenses. They can’t find them.

High school juniors and seniors — and recent graduates — interested in on-the-job training and real-life work experiences in a variety of trades have until February 18 to register for a special program, which can propel them into successful, well-paying careers.

The Staples High Guidance Department has partnered with Trumbull High School to offer the free Connecticut Pre-Apprenticeship High School Training program.

Students gain experience, and learn how to apply as an apprentice, in unions for carpenters, electricians, iron workers, road and highway laborers and operating engineers.

Certification can be earned in OSHA 10-Hour, flagger, and CPR/First Aid/AED.

Program graduates are eligible for notification of employment opportunities, resume reviews and interview preparation.

For more information, click here and here. Questions? Contact Staples guidance counselor Vicki Capozzi (vcapozzi@westportps.org) or Trish Howells (phowells@westportps.org).

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Carl Addison Swanson has written over 50 books, including the Hush McCormick series, Tug Christian thrillers, Scooter mysteries, Ian Fletcher legal series and Justin Carmichael nostalgic memoirs.

You can find them all at his website. Or you can find many — for free — at the Westport Bookcycle, outside Local to Market on the Main Street/Parker Harding corner.

But be kind. Be like Carl. When you pick up a book, try to give one in return.

(Photo/Carl Addison Swanson)

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The Westport Country Playhouse has new policies for all visitors.

Starting March 1, everyone 18 and older must show proof of 2 doses of the COVID vaccine, or one of Johnson & Johnson — plus the booster.

And as of now, everyone 5 to 17 years old must show proof of 2 doses of the vaccine. Everyone under 5 must be accompanied by a fully vaccinated adult, and provide a negative PCR test taken no more than 72 hours before the performance.

Masks must be worn at all times, with N95 and KN95 masks strongly encouraged. The Playhouse may ask audience members to double mask, with a surgical mask provided by the theater.

The Playhouse says, “We are aware that mask requirements are being lifted in some communities. But please note that Actors’ Equity requires that actors perform only at theaters where audiences are required to wear masks.

“Thank you for working with us to keep our community safe, especially for those who are most vulnerable. We will continue to follow the science and anticipate our guidelines will change as conditions change. We recommend that you check our website for the current policy before every visit to the Playhouse.”

Mask up before entering the famed venue,

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ᐧFor a while, Marie Gross has noticed a pair of bald eagles sitting in the same tree overlooking the Saugatuck River, across from Saugatuck Elementary School.

A couple of days ago, she snapped this “Westport … Naturally” image.

(Photo/Marie Gross)

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And finally … on this day in 1809, Abraham Lincoln was born. Today is also Georgia Day, a commemoration of the colony’s founding in 1733.

Put the two together, and you get …

Cody Thomas: “Kids Are Amazing”

Two days after the death of Cody Thomas, Staples High School students recalled him as one of the most caring and committed teachers they’d ever had. 

The roots of that concern are evident in an article Thomas — who began his career as a journalist — wrote for CT Mirror in December 2014, after his 1st year in the classroom.

Describing teenagers, Thomas said:

Kids are amazing — way more incredible than most adults. The students I teach are wonderful, brilliant, and creative. If they don’t always act that way, it’s because of some undefined deadening effect caused by school.

Cody Thomas, at Staples High School's graduation last year.

Cody Thomas, at Staples High School’s graduation last year.

I hope to always be able to work against the negative and to restore hope in our school systems. Can a naïve, young teacher change the life of one student? Probably not, but he or she can hope.

On my first day of teaching, I went over classroom procedures and emphasized the fact that I expected students at 16 to be mature most of the time. “Most of the time,” was key to my rhetoric.

“I’m 24,” I told them. “I’m not mature all of the time.”

Despite an entire world of influences pulling me in different directions, I wanted my classroom to be a place for taking risks. Treat kids like adults, and more often than not they will act like adults.

An email from superintendent of schools Elliott Landon to parents earlier today said that Thomas’ death has been declared a suicide.

(Click here for the full CT Mirror story by Cody Thomas.)